Published a full account of the use of a modified shipping container as a frog breeding lab (Leaf Litter Magazine, 2009) [Fenolio, D., R. Hill, J. Kaylock, and J Cruse Sanders, 2010. The use of a modified shipping container as an amphibian laboratory at the Atlanta Botanical Garden. Leaf Litter Magazine 3(1): 6–9.]

Shipped in excess of 500 captive produced frogs from the Panama collection to accredited institutions world wide, including over 350 Lemur Leaf Frogs, which serve as education and outreach tools for spreading the news about amphibian decline (2005-2012). Recipient Institutions include: the National Zoo, the Houston Zoo, Zoo Atlanta, the Toronto Zoo, the Albuquerque BioPark, the Miami Zoo, the Henry Dorley Zoo, the Toledo Zoo, the Como Zoo, the Henry Vials Zoo, the North Carolina Zoo, the Fresno Chaffe Zoo, the Bronx Zoo, the Denver Zoo, the Tennessee Aquarium, the Baltimore Aquarium, the Moody Gardens and the Audubon Institute.

Advised nearly a dozen institutions with regard to implementing new amphibian breeding labs, or modifications or existing labs, based on our own experiences (2008-2012). (e.g., Labs in Chile, labs in Costa Rica, lab in Panama, lab in Ecuador, lab in Brasil, lab in Singapore, lab at the Central Florida Zoo, lab at the Albuquerque BioPark, lab at the Oklahoma City Zoo, the Dallas Zoo, etc.)

Helped with academic research by supplying captive produced frogs for said work to no fewer than six universities/academic organizations (2008-2012). Examples: North Carolina State University (developmental research), Tennessee State (Bd research), University of South Florida (taxonomic research), University of Miami (captive husbandry research), Glasgow University (skin toxin research) and the National Institute of Health (skin toxin research).

Publications in the works include the first observation of competitive interactions between Crowned Tree Frog Tadpoles and the care and captive reproduction of the Slope-snouted Glass Frog.